The Single Resolution Board announced a technical meeting on 12 June 2026 on its draft operational guidance for banks on liquidity and funding in resolution, which is under public consultation. The session will present the draft guidance, highlight areas where the SRB wants feedback and provide clarifications before the consultation closes. The consultation text, which the SRB describes as non-binding, consolidates and would replace its previous guidance on three liquidity-related resolvability principles. It applies to banks under the SRB’s direct remit where resolution is the preferred strategy, and sets expectations for identifying key liquidity entities and drivers, estimating liquidity and funding needs for preferred and variant resolution strategies, measuring and reporting liquidity at resolution-group, entity and material-currency level, and identifying and mobilising collateral, including less liquid assets and cross-border collateral flows. Changes highlighted in the draft include broader KLE coverage, a one-month fast-moving scenario, post-resolution liquidity forecasts of at least six months for bail-in cases and at least one month for sale-of-business cases, and capabilities to refresh estimates and reporting within 24 hours and at intraday frequency. The meeting will run from 13:00 to 15:00, and the SRB will prioritise questions submitted in advance by 5 June 2026.
Single Resolution Board2026-05-01
Single Resolution Board consults on updated bank liquidity and funding in resolution guidance and schedules 12 June technical meeting
The Single Resolution Board will hold a technical meeting on 12 June 2026 to present and clarify its draft operational guidance for banks on liquidity and funding in resolution, currently under public consultation. The non-binding draft consolidates and replaces previous guidance on three liquidity-related resolvability principles, setting expectations for identifying key liquidity entities, estimating liquidity and funding needs, measuring and reporting liquidity, and mobilising collateral, including less liquid and cross-border assets.